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SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: North Korean officials have refused new offers of food aid for their flood-damaged country, saying they are "disappointed" by the response to their appeal. Even as he praised U.S. efforts, Pak Dok Hun, a North Korean spokesman in Geneva, said that North Korea decided not to request more aid even though the country is gripped by food shortages, and struggling to repair an estimated $15 billion in flood damage. Hun accused "hostile elements" (translation: South Korea) of obstructing aid from the United States and other nations. According to the U.N. Department of Humanitarian Affairs, only...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: North Korea Refuses New Food Aid | 2/8/1996 | See Source »

...they haven't learned anything from the course should therefore realize that that's nothing to boast about: it is an admission of their immaturity or of their lack of ability or of both. It isn't the first time a pearl was thrown to the undeserving. Michael S. Pak Ph.D. Candidate, History, GSAS

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: History Course Is Not a 'Gut' | 2/24/1994 | See Source »

Players would fall out of character often and would sometimes look out at the audience as if to make sure someone was still watching them. The only two players innocent of this were Sumalee Gunanukorn, who played the secretary Geraldine Barclay, and Alexander Pak, who played the government representative Dr. Rance...

Author: By Christopher J. Hernandez, | Title: Weary Comedy, Weary Cast Make 'What the Butler Saw' Tiring to See | 8/13/1993 | See Source »

Gunanukorn wailed realistically at the needed moment when her character was certified insane, and Pak was tastefully irrational as the certifying doctor. These two actors managed to play their roles consistently while the other players' characters fell to pieces between lines...

Author: By Christopher J. Hernandez, | Title: Weary Comedy, Weary Cast Make 'What the Butler Saw' Tiring to See | 8/13/1993 | See Source »

With each piece or session of the therapy Pak moves around, following spots on the stage, each made with a single light. When the light shines down on Pak's face, the shadows do more and build the character's independence gained from the therapy. By the time Pak works his way to the front of the stage, his character is much stronger, if not less insane...

Author: By Christopher J. Hernandez, | Title: Black Comedy, Gender Switch Make a Dramatic Winner | 7/30/1993 | See Source »

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